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Aug 16, 2017
08/17
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just go back and read my book, all about it, scotty campbell, alan campbell is my professor, he devised a way to do it. the problem isn't getting good ideas or even getting them past, the problem is once you put them in it is hard to get them done. most of the problem is congress. >> nine years ago i wrote the background of the heritage foundation about federal funds to states. i think the number is 2136, but i will throw a little bit of a wrench into this. you are going about this the wrong way. let me take an example related to federal funds, the federal government takes money out of my paycheck, department of treasury sends it to the department of agriculture, the parent of agriculture sends it to the food and nutrition service, sending it back to the state of wyoming which then sends the money down to laramie county school district one which is to the east i school so my daughter can have milk with her lunch. to go through this. >> what about chocolate milk? >> or something. i want to thank you for your service to the reagan administration, $60 billion in today's money is a lot of m
just go back and read my book, all about it, scotty campbell, alan campbell is my professor, he devised a way to do it. the problem isn't getting good ideas or even getting them past, the problem is once you put them in it is hard to get them done. most of the problem is congress. >> nine years ago i wrote the background of the heritage foundation about federal funds to states. i think the number is 2136, but i will throw a little bit of a wrench into this. you are going about this the...
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Aug 22, 2017
08/17
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jimmy carter, a guy named scotty campbell, colin campbell was my professor. he devised the whole way to do it. the problem isn't getting good ideas or even getting the past. the problem is once you put them in it so hard to get them done. much of the problem, most of the problem is congress. >> next, please. >> nine years ago i wrote the background for the heritage foundation about federal funds to states. i think the number is 2136, but i am going to talk a little bit of a wrench into this. i think you are going about this the wrong way. let me take an example relating to federal funds. the special meal program picks of the federal government takes money out of my paycheck. the department of treasury since it to the department of agriculture. the department of agriculture center to what i the food and nutrition service. the food and nutrition service in the back to the state of wyoming where i live, which then sends the money down to laramie county school district one which sends it to east high school so my daughter can have milk with her lunch. i could of
jimmy carter, a guy named scotty campbell, colin campbell was my professor. he devised the whole way to do it. the problem isn't getting good ideas or even getting the past. the problem is once you put them in it so hard to get them done. much of the problem, most of the problem is congress. >> next, please. >> nine years ago i wrote the background for the heritage foundation about federal funds to states. i think the number is 2136, but i am going to talk a little bit of a wrench...
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Oct 25, 2013
10/13
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and miss campbell, i want to touch on one last thing. i know, you had said you had gone through the process. did you complete -- actually complete it? >> i did not. i'm not signing up for insurance. my company provides insurance. >> but when you tested it yourself my understanding is you earlier you said you tried it through the virginia system. went to the website then you did or did not complete it? >> i did not complete it. >> you did not. thank you. thank you. i yield back the remain of my time. >> mr. cans i did is recognized. >> good news on the last one. >> it's a little bit repetitious . and today in anticipate of future payments, what are think, please. >> >> today -- $1 12 million, and for the year, i believe, $196 million. >> for the phase of the contract. >> and going forward do you have any? >> the total contract value with option years would be $293 million. >> the $196 million is not in addition to the 112. >> it's part of the 112. >> okay. >> the data services has a contract has been funded to just under $85 million. that
and miss campbell, i want to touch on one last thing. i know, you had said you had gone through the process. did you complete -- actually complete it? >> i did not. i'm not signing up for insurance. my company provides insurance. >> but when you tested it yourself my understanding is you earlier you said you tried it through the virginia system. went to the website then you did or did not complete it? >> i did not complete it. >> you did not. thank you. thank you. i...
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Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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at the two casuals is a lure , some of us in the remember as the american ambassador in campbell. those died in incidents that were clearly related to the war. murdered by -- it is not really clear who. some kind of communist element that may have been doing the work of the kgb or may not have. it is not very clear. but they're guess -- deaths are related to the war, but they did not die. we lost no lives fighting on the battlefield. never put any bets on the ground. we risk averse. it is interesting. the british were not risk averse. the british part of the alliance was that every spring they sent to or three teams of british intelligence officers and retired commandos into afghanistan to help train and assist the mujahedin with the pakistan support. he think about it, it is a strong and brave thing to do for a british officer to go into soviet afghanistan to assist the mujahedin. there was no rescue force. if they got in trouble there was no way out of. i had the opportunity in doing research for the buck to interview some of the british officers who did it on the condition that
at the two casuals is a lure , some of us in the remember as the american ambassador in campbell. those died in incidents that were clearly related to the war. murdered by -- it is not really clear who. some kind of communist element that may have been doing the work of the kgb or may not have. it is not very clear. but they're guess -- deaths are related to the war, but they did not die. we lost no lives fighting on the battlefield. never put any bets on the ground. we risk averse. it is...
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Nov 6, 2016
11/16
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would copy it and i attached it to one of my stories he does it that way and his campaign manager tel campbell most all the way to the end once he got rid of ted cruz the slogan in his office was let trump be trump and that is what he did. >> host: but those reporters said you are familiar with the white house and the management of the white house and here is our message of the day here is the message tomorrow. how much attention to pay to that? as a working reporter to look at the el lucy doozy style of management vs. managing a candidate or president. >> i have networking little bit but the president is the president no question who is in charge of the west wing. this same time there such a volume coming at you that is important so to plant so lucy qc and in many cases over many years and four previous presidents with that side of the spectrum it has not worked well and they have had to adjust with bill clinton who preferred an open door and this cdc in his own way with the chief of staff. at some point to say i am the president this is serious i need to make some adjustments social he be pr
would copy it and i attached it to one of my stories he does it that way and his campaign manager tel campbell most all the way to the end once he got rid of ted cruz the slogan in his office was let trump be trump and that is what he did. >> host: but those reporters said you are familiar with the white house and the management of the white house and here is our message of the day here is the message tomorrow. how much attention to pay to that? as a working reporter to look at the el...
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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if we didn't have class action lawyers holding copies the campbell chemical for misdeeds, we have to hire thousands of our government lawyers to pick up the slack. that's more taxes and more people looking for things to do. we like self-help. it's reason number two. we like to build self reliance among our citizenry. people rely on themselves and their neighborhoods when things go wrong, not waiting around for the government to say that and bail them out. this again is consistent with private enforcement of the law. reason number three, better instances there would like to privatize because private sector participants are motivated by profit and we think that galvanizes them to do better job and government bureaucrats they get paid the same matter what they do. this is consistent with private enforcement. class action lawyers and contingency fees. these are a terrific motivator. and so we would expect that i'll explain in a moment there's data to confirm this. we would expect class action lawyers do a better job enforcing the law then government lawyers do. number four, better resour
if we didn't have class action lawyers holding copies the campbell chemical for misdeeds, we have to hire thousands of our government lawyers to pick up the slack. that's more taxes and more people looking for things to do. we like self-help. it's reason number two. we like to build self reliance among our citizenry. people rely on themselves and their neighborhoods when things go wrong, not waiting around for the government to say that and bail them out. this again is consistent with private...
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Apr 17, 2014
04/14
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for the family of krystle campbell. her parents have been told that she had survived. they rushed to mass. general hospital where they were looking for their daughter. they were brought into the recovery room and they were shown this woman lying on the bed, and it wasn't their daughter. it was then one's friend -- then one's friend. the mix up there in all that chaos, karen had a phone and krystle campbell's driver's license when she entered mass. general hospital. it was was the only way that staffers were i've been any of the victims at that point. so you can just imagine -- identifying any of the victims. hearing that the dollar to buy such a massive attack hi on a jt the utter horror of learning the actual truth on this. this is michelle larue who we've been talking about. >> michel is 39. she lives in quincy. she was originally from me. she was and a question a student in college. she's a big horse back ride it. from the time she was a little girl. when she was at marathon sports, she was there watching her boyfriend who was running the marathon, it just before th
for the family of krystle campbell. her parents have been told that she had survived. they rushed to mass. general hospital where they were looking for their daughter. they were brought into the recovery room and they were shown this woman lying on the bed, and it wasn't their daughter. it was then one's friend -- then one's friend. the mix up there in all that chaos, karen had a phone and krystle campbell's driver's license when she entered mass. general hospital. it was was the only way that...
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May 6, 2024
05/24
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able to have conversation about the updated of lost in the gulf with my friend and and colleague joe campbell. and i'm sure that you'll have a lot of questions afterwards. i think we're going to, you know, start by listening to joe. i have a few questions you and we'll see how this is going. but please, you know, we are going to be looking forward to hearing from you as well later on. thank you, filippo. thanks very much. okay. thanks many thanks to the fine staff and professional staff here at politics prose. it's been a real pleasure working them and and their efforts and making tonight possible so thank you thank very much all right let's get started i've got my copy it's a signed copy as well. i encourage you to do take the opportunity and do that later on as well towards the end. you know, this is your seventh solo author book. i hope i'm not messing up the numbers here. that's a lot. and as you those who have written a book and even those who haven't come probably imagine every book has own story. and it's a little bit of a story in and of itself about why. what's the motivation, writin
able to have conversation about the updated of lost in the gulf with my friend and and colleague joe campbell. and i'm sure that you'll have a lot of questions afterwards. i think we're going to, you know, start by listening to joe. i have a few questions you and we'll see how this is going. but please, you know, we are going to be looking forward to hearing from you as well later on. thank you, filippo. thanks very much. okay. thanks many thanks to the fine staff and professional staff here at...
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Jan 4, 2014
01/14
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lady jane campbell said that mrs. kennedy's poise and dignity had given the american people from this day on the one thing they always lacked, majesty. frank sinatra said jackie had become america's queen. there was majesty during those four days in november with the muffled drums and the riderless horse, but the 34-year-old jackie also made the funeral seem personal. a reminder not just a president had been killed, but also a young family had been felled with two children left fatherless. a typical sentiment was on a new york city news stand, closed because of a death in the american family. by the time almost 6-year-old caroline was heard consoling her mother, you'll be all right, momny, don't -- mommy, don't cry, and we watched still-2-year-old john jr. saluting his father's coffin, 80% of americans surveyed said they felt as if they had personally lost someone very close and dear. nine in ten that grief caused them physical discomfort. the sense of personal grief is captured in the famous exchange when washington
lady jane campbell said that mrs. kennedy's poise and dignity had given the american people from this day on the one thing they always lacked, majesty. frank sinatra said jackie had become america's queen. there was majesty during those four days in november with the muffled drums and the riderless horse, but the 34-year-old jackie also made the funeral seem personal. a reminder not just a president had been killed, but also a young family had been felled with two children left fatherless. a...
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1.0
May 8, 2021
05/21
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operators to radio station, radio owners and operators for promotional purposes, warners brought you by campbell's soup and couldn't broadcast troop movements or ship movements or -- they took loose lip-synching ships literally and gave instructions to these radio stations for what they could say or couldn't say and followed the orders of the government that they believed the nation was at risk or threatened, and do these things so it is fascinating how homogenous our nation was in 1941 versus today. obviously september 11th, the planes ran into the world trade center and the pentagon and our national unity only lasted a couple weeks or months and they soon show the bickering among themselves over union issues whereas we stayed pretty unified as a nation starting december 7th and stayed that way until 1945 when the japanese finally surrendered to douglas macarthur in world war ii. >> the book is divided by day december 1st through 30 first. how prepared was the united states on december 1st for a major war and how much of a surprise to the american government was december 7th? >> we were not prepa
operators to radio station, radio owners and operators for promotional purposes, warners brought you by campbell's soup and couldn't broadcast troop movements or ship movements or -- they took loose lip-synching ships literally and gave instructions to these radio stations for what they could say or couldn't say and followed the orders of the government that they believed the nation was at risk or threatened, and do these things so it is fascinating how homogenous our nation was in 1941 versus...
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Sep 8, 2013
09/13
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. >> my name is campbell jones and i'm a third generation washingtonian. we'll talk on the radio before. the comment about the tracking and all of that this kind of interesting. my parents and grandparents all went to dunbar. my grandfather, he came over from alexandria to go daily. you had to walk halfway across town to get to school, and he told me he didn't have an overcoat. he had a sport coat, puts what is on underneath hey, i don't need a code, you know? he ended up being the highest ranking black in the military, a colonel. and ended up integrating the armed forces which what i had mentioned to you. what i was going to say is i went to a track school, and -- >> [inaudible] >> and we took the same classes as the best western wilson high school students took, and we scored u as well or better on te exams. we have dedicated teachers, and those stories about, if you messed up, the story would get home before you did. you would be in -- but now, the technical high school, mckinley technology high school, and it's changed. you don't see so many folks who
. >> my name is campbell jones and i'm a third generation washingtonian. we'll talk on the radio before. the comment about the tracking and all of that this kind of interesting. my parents and grandparents all went to dunbar. my grandfather, he came over from alexandria to go daily. you had to walk halfway across town to get to school, and he told me he didn't have an overcoat. he had a sport coat, puts what is on underneath hey, i don't need a code, you know? he ended up being the...
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Sep 2, 2013
09/13
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developed made 40 percent of the population 35 percent will back him no matter what he does when jimmy campbell does the of routine that they support all of mayor ron neece position they say yes with the bombing that just shows how little they think of this stuff and that is a problem we back people instead of policies? it is our obligation to get more informed especially given the dangers we face in the world. >> host: are there closet conservatives behind the scene? >> guest: absolutely. hundreds of them. absolutely. they are discriminated against when they come out. it is much harder to be a conservative in hollywood day and gave. not even close. they still assembly races but there is not homophobia and there is tremendous anti-religious sentiment that is more prevalent. when i wrote prime-time propaganda one of the folks was patricia heaton she is set aside as the unnamed source was talking to me i said have you ever been discriminated against in hollywood? she is the star of everybody loves raymond. a very talented actress. she has been working consistently about 15 years she said know i n
developed made 40 percent of the population 35 percent will back him no matter what he does when jimmy campbell does the of routine that they support all of mayor ron neece position they say yes with the bombing that just shows how little they think of this stuff and that is a problem we back people instead of policies? it is our obligation to get more informed especially given the dangers we face in the world. >> host: are there closet conservatives behind the scene? >> guest:...
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Nov 6, 2011
11/11
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jack campbell supported reagan's ultimatum on august 3, but after months passed it was clear that the strike had been broke in, kempe pleaded with reagan and said you know mr. president, you have one, rehire these people or at least most of them. save the country money and improve air safety, and show mercy. it will be good. but reagan was not interested. in many ways the more expensive, the more dangerous is busting of patco was, the more that act was bound to impress one that reagan was determined to impress, soviet leaders. so it came to pass that jack maher, so came to pass that moment that jack maher and so many others thought would never,, the mass firing of more than 11,000 skilled specialists and their banishment not only from their jobs for from their careers for there was no other employer for people of this training in the united states. in many ways i think we are still picking through the wreckage from that collision that occurred 30 years ago now. one of the last legacies of that fateful events of turns out was the rapid dissolution of all u.s. workers ability to use str
jack campbell supported reagan's ultimatum on august 3, but after months passed it was clear that the strike had been broke in, kempe pleaded with reagan and said you know mr. president, you have one, rehire these people or at least most of them. save the country money and improve air safety, and show mercy. it will be good. but reagan was not interested. in many ways the more expensive, the more dangerous is busting of patco was, the more that act was bound to impress one that reagan was...
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Oct 7, 2012
10/12
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and kim campbell, who was the sole woman prime minister of canada, she encountered -- she really encountered a plot of the same problems that we talk about in the book, when she ran for both leader of the party, which made her prime minister and i ran the election shortly thereafter. her attire was talked about, marital history was talk about. the fact that she was dating somebody was talked about. so when those two cultures, you see some of the same thing you see in this country. >> three of the question here? kaitlyn. >> women have had to chuckle through life. do you see this as an advantage over all? in climbing the pole ignoring the fact that they start later, maybe they won't get that far up on the greasy pole, but the flexibility -- [inaudible] -- advantage in the future. >> well, you know, a book i read about elizabeth dole describes a rhetorical style is rhetorical multitasking. even though she is not have children, i would argue she's juggled multiple roles in a way perhaps they haven't as a spouse of a candidate, for example. and so, i think successful women politicians are able to
and kim campbell, who was the sole woman prime minister of canada, she encountered -- she really encountered a plot of the same problems that we talk about in the book, when she ran for both leader of the party, which made her prime minister and i ran the election shortly thereafter. her attire was talked about, marital history was talk about. the fact that she was dating somebody was talked about. so when those two cultures, you see some of the same thing you see in this country. >>...
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Jun 8, 2015
06/15
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i hold a pair of aluminum cans it used to be campbell's soup cans. if registers your response to a. people go in with problems so if you go in and of the auditor says what's going on with you today? i had a fight with my wife and he can see that the needle is moving. so you talk about it and then you told the story again. this is a common feature of a lot of kinds of therapy. you rob the power of the experience by repeating it and then the auditor will say do you remember an instance in your earlier life where something similar and he would say yes my mother scolded me in the same words when i was 5-years-old. i've never forgotten it. then they would say what about earlier? and other member anything earlier. while the needle just moved. what was that? i had an image. well, go back to that bar image. what do you see? it looks like 17th century france. okay so walk out there. what's happening here is you are having a memory than earlier life and the needle has just proven to you that it's true so this is good news you flip the four and a scientology can help you discover those earlier
i hold a pair of aluminum cans it used to be campbell's soup cans. if registers your response to a. people go in with problems so if you go in and of the auditor says what's going on with you today? i had a fight with my wife and he can see that the needle is moving. so you talk about it and then you told the story again. this is a common feature of a lot of kinds of therapy. you rob the power of the experience by repeating it and then the auditor will say do you remember an instance in your...
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Oct 24, 2013
10/13
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campbell. you all testified in september so either you didn't know about these problems or you knew about them and chose not to disclose them. which one is it? >> chairman are portion of the application worked as designed. people have been able to enroll. not at the pace or the experience we would have liked but the end testing was the responsibility of cmx. are portion of the system is what we testified in terms of what was ready to go live. but it was not art decision to go live. >> it was not your decision to go live? >> it was cms's decision. >> did you ever recommend to cms that perhaps they weren't ready and i might want to delay the day? >> it was not our position to do so. >> so you chose not to share those thoughts with them? >> let me clarify my statement. cms had the ultimate decision for a live or. ♪ decision not cpi. we were not in a position. do we were there to support our clients and it was not our position to tell our clients whether they should go live or not go live. >> who
campbell. you all testified in september so either you didn't know about these problems or you knew about them and chose not to disclose them. which one is it? >> chairman are portion of the application worked as designed. people have been able to enroll. not at the pace or the experience we would have liked but the end testing was the responsibility of cmx. are portion of the system is what we testified in terms of what was ready to go live. but it was not art decision to go live....
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Jun 7, 2015
06/15
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it used to be a campbell soup. and there is electrical wires going to a media that your looking at. and it does register something. it registers your galvanic skin response, essentially a sweaty palm. the legal moves command you ask me a question and i answer. you you can see that it is one 3rd of a lie detector. you can imagine the therapeutic situation is altered by having this machine between the two of us. and people go in with problems. so if you go in and the auditor says, you know what's going on with you today to welcome i had a fight with my wife. i can see that, and he can. the needle is moving. tell me about it. so you talk about it and then you tell the story again. you diminish the emotional aspect. this is a common feature a lot of kinds of therapy. you rob the power of the experience by repeating it and denaturing it. and the honorable and the honorable say, well, do you remember an instance in your earlier life where something similar. you might say yes, mother scolded me in exactly the same words when i was five years old. i've never forgotten it. certainly you see
it used to be a campbell soup. and there is electrical wires going to a media that your looking at. and it does register something. it registers your galvanic skin response, essentially a sweaty palm. the legal moves command you ask me a question and i answer. you you can see that it is one 3rd of a lie detector. you can imagine the therapeutic situation is altered by having this machine between the two of us. and people go in with problems. so if you go in and the auditor says, you know what's...
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Jan 2, 2016
01/16
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i used to work in camden we worked for campbell soup it and i would shine shoes and get on the ferry over in camden so it was a flourishing city at one time. but a lot of times what drove the businesses out? and taxes, high crime, poor schools, you have to ask the question isn't what drove the people out of a particular city? you can see that in many cities the suburbanization of the city's a lot of time people talk about the white flight to the suburbs and this is in the '70s but black flight to the suburbs was great then the white people didn't like that anymore than the white people. so one house to ask the question what created the condition? looked at each right at one time during the '40's and 50's in part of the '60s it was a city with 1.9% million people it was flourishing today it was around 700,000, and the industry has gone and people ask why. it turns out of mayor in the '70s was responsible for a lot of the policy for his successors that iran the industry out of the city. what led to the evacuation of many cities? >> host: how often do you write your column? >> once a we
i used to work in camden we worked for campbell soup it and i would shine shoes and get on the ferry over in camden so it was a flourishing city at one time. but a lot of times what drove the businesses out? and taxes, high crime, poor schools, you have to ask the question isn't what drove the people out of a particular city? you can see that in many cities the suburbanization of the city's a lot of time people talk about the white flight to the suburbs and this is in the '70s but black flight...
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178
Sep 29, 2012
09/12
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it is led by dean tom campbell, an extraordinary scholar and a wonderful leader of the law school and is an enormously diverse place. a faculty that goes from left to right and center, graduates and a practicing law across the united states, passed the bar. it's a great comic replace to teach law. i wrote the brief against obama with the fact in mind that i have a lot of liberal friends on the cali. my colleagues and the faculty. law professors are quite compulsive but the level of the scholarship. when you read something that you want to have available to your colleagues it has to be overwhelmingly document to and fed noted. and a brief against obama there are 45 pages of footnotes and 235 pages of text. and so when i tell you anything and make a statement about the president tonight and about his record to find in a brief against a llama. and as documentation that takes you executory confine the fact that i cite, the quotations that i put forward in the arguments that i make because i have in mind that when the law school to you reconvenes. i'll leave a copy of the button each of my
it is led by dean tom campbell, an extraordinary scholar and a wonderful leader of the law school and is an enormously diverse place. a faculty that goes from left to right and center, graduates and a practicing law across the united states, passed the bar. it's a great comic replace to teach law. i wrote the brief against obama with the fact in mind that i have a lot of liberal friends on the cali. my colleagues and the faculty. law professors are quite compulsive but the level of the...
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60
Jul 19, 2015
07/15
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but first author tracy campbell talks about the rise and fall of one of the countries most promising political figures edward pritchard junior. >> that title is "short of the glory: the fall and redemption of edward pritchard." in the mid 1940s if you had asked who is a bright shining star in american politics on a national scale, someone who is going to be governor, senator, perhaps president to a lot of people, what it said ed pritchard of kentucky. he was one of those people who work in the white house when his in his early '20s. he seemed destined for great things and then came back to kentucky in the mid 1940s was indicted for stuffing of ballot box. went to prison and so that incredible promise just flamed out. so i spent the rest of his life trying to rebuild out of the shadows out of the tragedy of the scandal. prichard seem to create one of two very distinct reactions in people. either they were just taken by his intelligence, his photographic memory, his wit and his ability to mimic people. on the other and a lot of people saw him as arrogant and too big for his britches. h
but first author tracy campbell talks about the rise and fall of one of the countries most promising political figures edward pritchard junior. >> that title is "short of the glory: the fall and redemption of edward pritchard." in the mid 1940s if you had asked who is a bright shining star in american politics on a national scale, someone who is going to be governor, senator, perhaps president to a lot of people, what it said ed pritchard of kentucky. he was one of those people...
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Nov 12, 2011
11/11
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[applause] >> thank you, david campbell. i'm so delighted delighted to be here. i'm honored to be asked to participate in this wonderful foundation. thank you father jenkins for being here representing notre dame. i think it is a wonderful idea what the foundation is doing, forming these programs with a series of universities and i think the subject we are here to talk about today could not be more timely. i have to tell you on a personal note it has been 30 years this year since i started to cover the administration of ronald reagan. i can't believe how time has flown. like every other journalist, we all have these gory gory memory of president reagan. minus particularly personal. they had then and i were welcoming our first child. jeffrey was born in 1981 so i took maternity leave and then away for about two months and is planning to come back in december. when i got a call from the white house press up his inviting me to come over and showed the baby to this staff, the white house asked. and so i got jeffrey organized. he was two months old and came over that
[applause] >> thank you, david campbell. i'm so delighted delighted to be here. i'm honored to be asked to participate in this wonderful foundation. thank you father jenkins for being here representing notre dame. i think it is a wonderful idea what the foundation is doing, forming these programs with a series of universities and i think the subject we are here to talk about today could not be more timely. i have to tell you on a personal note it has been 30 years this year since i...
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Nov 2, 2015
11/15
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my cousin and i worked for campbell soup, unloading tomatoes in april -- i mean in august. and i used to shine shoes. i'd get on the ferry and shine shoes in camp den. so camden was a flourishing city at one time. but you know, a lot of times you have to say, well, what drove the businesses out of the cities? well, a lot of things like taxes, high crime, poor schools, and all those -- you have to ask questions, what drove the people out of a particular city? and so you see that in many cities, urbanization of the cities and a lot of time people talk about white flight to the suburbs, and this is in the '70s, very popular topic. but turns out that black flight to the suburbs was greater than white flight to the suburbs and black people don't like being mugged anymore than white people. so, one has to ask the question, what created the condition? look at detroit. detroit at one time, during the '40s, and '50s and part of the 7 six's, a si with 1.9 million people. today it's 700,000 people in the city. people had less. and industry has gone. and people have to ask why. turns o
my cousin and i worked for campbell soup, unloading tomatoes in april -- i mean in august. and i used to shine shoes. i'd get on the ferry and shine shoes in camp den. so camden was a flourishing city at one time. but you know, a lot of times you have to say, well, what drove the businesses out of the cities? well, a lot of things like taxes, high crime, poor schools, and all those -- you have to ask questions, what drove the people out of a particular city? and so you see that in many cities,...
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Nov 7, 2015
11/15
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my cousin and i worked for campbell soup unloading tomatoea in april-- i mean, in august. i used to use trying to suit-- shoes. camden was a flourishing city at one time.inesses out but, a lot of times you had tow, say, well, what drove the thi businesses out of the city's? a lot of things like taxes, high crime, poor schools and you have to ask the question, what drove the people out of the particular city? so, you see in many cities,es, urbanization of the cities and d lot of times people are talking about white flight to the icburbs.op this is in the 70s, very popular topic. turns out that out black flighto the suburbs was greater than a r white flight the suburbs and ita turns out black people don't like being mugged anymore than,e white people and so one has to ask the question, what created the conditions. look at detroit. detroit at one time during the d 40s, 50s and i believe partt of of the 60s was a city with s 1.9 million people.eople. it was a flourishing the city0,0 and today it's around0 700,000s. people in the city. people have laughs and theone. industry ha
my cousin and i worked for campbell soup unloading tomatoea in april-- i mean, in august. i used to use trying to suit-- shoes. camden was a flourishing city at one time.inesses out but, a lot of times you had tow, say, well, what drove the thi businesses out of the city's? a lot of things like taxes, high crime, poor schools and you have to ask the question, what drove the people out of the particular city? so, you see in many cities,es, urbanization of the cities and d lot of times people are...
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Jun 9, 2016
06/16
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then we have another owe and i'll stop with this -- general campbell who says the same thing. they frequently live in fear and they or their families will be targeted for kidnappings and death. many have suffered their fate -- this fate already. the s.i.v. program offers hope that their sacrifices on our behalf will not be forgotten. you know, i would hope that the senator who comes over to object to this act of humanitarian of moral obligation as stated by these respected military leaders, that they wouldn't because they didn't get a vote on their amendment, be a reason to stop this act that is a moral obligation of this country. well, if they come over and object, then they've got their priorities badly screwed up. and if these people are killed, then they'll have nobody to answer to but their families. so i hope that we will pass this by unanimous consent, and not have for a parochial, their own self-ish reason some senator come and object. i yield to the senator from new hampshire, senator shaheen. mrs. shaheen: thank you, senator mccain, and thank you for your leadership
then we have another owe and i'll stop with this -- general campbell who says the same thing. they frequently live in fear and they or their families will be targeted for kidnappings and death. many have suffered their fate -- this fate already. the s.i.v. program offers hope that their sacrifices on our behalf will not be forgotten. you know, i would hope that the senator who comes over to object to this act of humanitarian of moral obligation as stated by these respected military leaders,...
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Oct 19, 2014
10/14
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your own will campbell, the late will campbell came in and i was sitting with will near the end of this trial. this is the way that one wound up. this was in 1998. sam bowers, and imperial wizard of the white knights of the ku klux klan and repute he hadly the mastermind behind a campaign of terror across mississippi three decades ago, was convicted yesterday for a 1966 civil rights murder after three previous prosecutions had failed. so, again, that was a great and dramatic moment there, just interestingly, those of you who might know, might have known will or knew of him, he was not only a great civil rights champion from south mississippi. but also tried to minister to the klan. he said they're all children of god. he knew sam bowers and when he came to the courthouse he not only had a very warm and emotional meeting with the members the damar family and he went over and hugged sam bowers. when the verdict was announced there was cheering in the courtroom again and i looked over at will and will had a tear, was basically ready to cry. i said, will, you may be the only person in this
your own will campbell, the late will campbell came in and i was sitting with will near the end of this trial. this is the way that one wound up. this was in 1998. sam bowers, and imperial wizard of the white knights of the ku klux klan and repute he hadly the mastermind behind a campaign of terror across mississippi three decades ago, was convicted yesterday for a 1966 civil rights murder after three previous prosecutions had failed. so, again, that was a great and dramatic moment there, just...
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Apr 6, 2015
04/15
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there are documents on the record of how it worked and he knew about the affair with judith campbell who was also having an affair so of course he was never going to fire hoover and it's incredible you look back at what happened in those days. >> host: good afternoon and welcome to book tv on c-span2 this is our monthly program. we have one author to talk about his or her book. this month it is the best-selling author ron kessler the author of 20 books. we will be talking about some of the things you've heard in the past half-hour. we are going to put the numbers up on the screen because we want your input as well. 748 if you live in eastern and central time zones. 748, 8201 for those of you out west and if you can't get through on the phone and want to make a comment@booktv is our trigger handle or you can make a comment on our facebook page facebook.com/booktv or send an e-mail to booktv@c-span.org. how did you get into this business? >> guest: i worked on the high school paper and i did a story about preventing stories and i interviewed all the clergymen in belmont and sure enough
there are documents on the record of how it worked and he knew about the affair with judith campbell who was also having an affair so of course he was never going to fire hoover and it's incredible you look back at what happened in those days. >> host: good afternoon and welcome to book tv on c-span2 this is our monthly program. we have one author to talk about his or her book. this month it is the best-selling author ron kessler the author of 20 books. we will be talking about some of...
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Jul 21, 2015
07/15
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to fort campbell to meet with the families and talk about it. i was governor then and i drove up to here what he had to say. he spoke of those men and women then as these five were, as peacekeepers, there to protect the lives and to protect the peace, to act as a force for stability and trust for our country. their work, president reagan said at the time of those 289 which can as equally well be said of these five, their work was the perfect expression of the best of the judeo-christian tradition. they were the ones of whom christ spoke when he said blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of god. president reagan said of the 289 who lost their lives 30 years ago what could be said of these five this week. what a poet said of soldiers in another war, they will never grow old. they will always be young. and we know one thing with every bit of our thinking they're in the arms of god. chattanoogaans said last friday the two words: chattanooga strong. they were repeated by senator corker, by the governor, by most of the memb
to fort campbell to meet with the families and talk about it. i was governor then and i drove up to here what he had to say. he spoke of those men and women then as these five were, as peacekeepers, there to protect the lives and to protect the peace, to act as a force for stability and trust for our country. their work, president reagan said at the time of those 289 which can as equally well be said of these five, their work was the perfect expression of the best of the judeo-christian...
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Sep 23, 2012
09/12
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demonstrations there which brought the desegregation, eisenhower ordered the 101st airborne division from fort campbell to little rock to enforce desegregation. that was a forceful message to everyone in the south that be desegregation integration was the law the lan and that eisenhower was going to support it with the armed forces of the united states, with a powerful message. [applause] >> finally, eisenhower did not take the lead and argued advantages of integration as john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson did. eisenhower felt that this was a very difficult pill to swallow, and the best way to get them to do that was to stress that this was the law this was the rule o law and he as president was going to take care of the law. made an easier pill to swallow. [applause] >> jonathan, it's great to be with you today, and with all the booklovers at this fabulous festival, and with a very distinguished biographer, jean edward smith, who i think has contributed immeasurably to the eisenhower scholarship. and i have to agree, he was under estimated, definitely, and i'm so glad that you have written such a powe
demonstrations there which brought the desegregation, eisenhower ordered the 101st airborne division from fort campbell to little rock to enforce desegregation. that was a forceful message to everyone in the south that be desegregation integration was the law the lan and that eisenhower was going to support it with the armed forces of the united states, with a powerful message. [applause] >> finally, eisenhower did not take the lead and argued advantages of integration as john f. kennedy...
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Oct 9, 2012
10/12
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demonstrations there which blocked the desegregation eisenhower ordered the 101st airborne division from fort campbell to little rock to enforce desegregation with a forceful message to everyone in the south that the desegregation integration was the loss of land and eisenhower was going to support it with the armed forces of the united states. what a powerful message. [applause] but finally, eisenhower did not take the lead in rgb advantages of integration as john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson to. eisenhower felt this was a difficult till -- pill to swallow and the best way to get them to do that was to stress that this was the law. this was the rule of law and he is president was going to take care of the law. it made it much easier, and easier pill for the south to swallow. [applause] >> jonathan is great to be with you today and with all the booklovers at this fabulous festival and with a very distinguished biographer, jean edward smith way think has contributed immeasurably to the eisenhower scholarship and i have to agree he was underestimated definitely and i'm so glad that you have written suc
demonstrations there which blocked the desegregation eisenhower ordered the 101st airborne division from fort campbell to little rock to enforce desegregation with a forceful message to everyone in the south that the desegregation integration was the loss of land and eisenhower was going to support it with the armed forces of the united states. what a powerful message. [applause] but finally, eisenhower did not take the lead in rgb advantages of integration as john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson...
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Sep 22, 2012
09/12
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demonstrations there which blocked the desegregation eisenhower ordered the 101st airborne division from fort campbell to little rock to enforce desegregation with a forceful message to everyone in the south that the desegregation integration was the loss of land and eisenhower was going to support it with the armed forces of the united states. what a powerful message. [applause] but finally, eisenhower did not take the lead in rgb advantages of integration as john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson to. eisenhower felt this was a difficult till -- pill to swallow and the best way to get them to do that was to stress that this was the law. this was the rule of law and he is president was going to take care of the law. it made it much easier, and easier pill for the south to swallow. [applause] >> jonathan is great to be with you today and with all the booklovers at this fabulous festival and with a very distinguished biographer, jean edward smith way think has contributed immeasurably to the eisenhower scholarship and i have to agree he was underestimated definitely and i'm so glad that you have written suc
demonstrations there which blocked the desegregation eisenhower ordered the 101st airborne division from fort campbell to little rock to enforce desegregation with a forceful message to everyone in the south that the desegregation integration was the loss of land and eisenhower was going to support it with the armed forces of the united states. what a powerful message. [applause] but finally, eisenhower did not take the lead in rgb advantages of integration as john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson...
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Oct 8, 2012
10/12
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demonstrations there which blocked the desegregation eisenhower ordered the 101st airborne division from fort campbell to little rock to enforce desegregation with a forceful message to everyone in the south that the desegregation integration was the loss of land and eisenhower was going to support it with the armed forces of the united states. what a powerful message. [applause] but finally, eisenhower did not take the lead in rgb advantages of integration as john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson to. eisenhower felt this was a difficult till -- pill to swallow and the best way to get them to do that was to stress that this was the law. this was the rule of law and he is president was going to take care of the law. it made it much easier, and easier pill for the south to swallow. [applause] >> jonathan is great to be with you today and with all the booklovers at this fabulous festival and with a very distinguished biographer, jean edward smith way think has contributed immeasurably to the eisenhower scholarship and i have to agree he was underestimated definitely and i'm so glad that you have written suc
demonstrations there which blocked the desegregation eisenhower ordered the 101st airborne division from fort campbell to little rock to enforce desegregation with a forceful message to everyone in the south that the desegregation integration was the loss of land and eisenhower was going to support it with the armed forces of the united states. what a powerful message. [applause] but finally, eisenhower did not take the lead in rgb advantages of integration as john f. kennedy and lyndon johnson...
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Aug 29, 2013
08/13
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campbell. >> here, here. >> mr. speaker, it's a secret that not withstanding the whole of the damascus, i have reservations about the use of military action, the circumstances with which we are engaged. in particular, those reservations to the absence of a proper role for the united nations. if the government motion now sets out, there is a role for the inspectors with a duty imposed upon the secretary-general, and that an endorsement to use every effort to secure united nations security council resolution under chapter seven of its charter. in addition, and i will come back to this in a moment, the motion also provide that for all of us, supporters, skeptics, or opponents, there will be opportunity to pass judgment on any question of british involvement at a further stage win, not surprisingly perhaps, rather more information may be available. >> does he agree for some of us at least a boat tonight will not predetermined whether we are satisfied that the next stage that there was a coherent plan, this is not a flic
campbell. >> here, here. >> mr. speaker, it's a secret that not withstanding the whole of the damascus, i have reservations about the use of military action, the circumstances with which we are engaged. in particular, those reservations to the absence of a proper role for the united nations. if the government motion now sets out, there is a role for the inspectors with a duty imposed upon the secretary-general, and that an endorsement to use every effort to secure united nations...
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Oct 24, 2011
10/11
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the only mention was said by with the campbell in front of two pyramids. i now think that was product placement because he would not know what was on the cover of the cigarettes. [laughter] it is the pyramids? that must be good. but that is what we knew and a section went -- section on better life but the fact that the arab civilization made. we talk about the dark ages. and then the others moved south and advances with science and technology with art and architecture. and when the renaissance occurred it is not because they have been buried or to say do this and so too did the knowledge that was developing. we could have taught history as if it were a continuous love of learning with civilization being one process of interdependency. because of the don't know is the images that we get or the understanding comes through negative stereotypes. it consumes may sometimes to think about what most of us when we polled americans when is the first thing that comes to mind when you think of arabs? >> 85% are ol, wellcome of violence or terrorism. what is the best t
the only mention was said by with the campbell in front of two pyramids. i now think that was product placement because he would not know what was on the cover of the cigarettes. [laughter] it is the pyramids? that must be good. but that is what we knew and a section went -- section on better life but the fact that the arab civilization made. we talk about the dark ages. and then the others moved south and advances with science and technology with art and architecture. and when the renaissance...